Climate-Endangered Arctic Epishelf Lake Harbors Viral Assemblages with Distinct Genetic Repertoires

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Abstract

Milne Fiord, located on the coastal margin of the Last Ice Area (LIA) in the High Arctic (82°N, Canada), harbors an epishelf lake, a rare type of ice-dependent ecosystem in which a layer of freshwater overlies marine water connected to the open ocean. This microbe-dominated ecosystem faces catastrophic change due to the deterioration of its ice environment related to warming temperatures. We produced the first assessment of viral abundance, diversity, and distribution in this vulnerable ecosystem and explored the niches available for viral taxa and the functional genes underlying their distribution. We found that the viral community in the freshwater layer was distinct from, and more diverse than, the community in the underlying seawater and contained a different set of putative auxiliary metabolic genes, including the sulfur starvation-linked gene tauD and the gene coding for patatin-like phospholipase. The halocline community resembled the freshwater more than the marine community, but harbored viral taxa unique to this layer. We observed distinct viral assemblages immediately below the halocline, at a depth that was associated with a peak of prasinophyte algae and the viral family Phycodnaviridae. We also assembled 15 complete circular genomes, including a putative Pelagibacter phage with a marine distribution. It appears that despite its isolated and precarious situation, the varied niches in this epishelf lake support a diverse viral community, highlighting the importance of characterizing underexplored microbiota in the Last Ice Area before these ecosystems undergo irreversible change.

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Labbé, M., Thaler, M., Pitot, T. M., Rapp, J. Z., Vincent, W. F., & Culley, A. I. (2022). Climate-Endangered Arctic Epishelf Lake Harbors Viral Assemblages with Distinct Genetic Repertoires. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 88(17). https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.00228-22

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